Find a church

Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.

St George

Ivychurch, Kent | TN29 0DL

Long, low and with a battlemented and buttressed tower, St George's is built on a grand scale, and was perhaps always larger than its rural agricultural population ever actually needed.

St James

Jacobstowe, Devon | EX20 3RQ

A small, beautifully kept, and welcoming country church with a fascinating history.

We have supported this church

St Bede

Jarrow, County Durham | NE32 3LX

We have supported this church

St Paul

Jarrow, Tyne & Wear | NE32 3DZ

Jarrow was one of the first places to be invaded by the Vikings, who eventually colonised the North East, and home of the Venerable Bede, a scholar, monk and writer, known as the Father of English History.

Jervaulx Abbey

Ripon, Yorkshire | HG4 4PH

A tranquil, historic and beautiful Abbey in North Yorkshire.

St George

Jesmond, Tyne & Wear | NE2 2TF

St George's 19th century church is one of the outstanding ecclesiastical buildings in the north of England.

Jordans Meeting House

Jordans, Buckinghamshire | HP9 2SN

Standing in a beautiful valley deep in the Chilterns, this Quaker meeting house dates from 1688 and was one of the first to be purpose built.

We have supported this church

All Saints

Kedleston, Derbyshire | DE22 5JH

Spectacular memorials and Norman monsters.

St Bartholomew

Keelby, Lincolnshire | DN41 8ED

We have supported this church

Keenley Chapel

Keenley, Northumberland | NE47 9NU

The year 1750 is embossed in lead on the porch doorway and services are held once every fortnight. Inside there is a warm and welcoming atmosphere of a traditional country chapel complete with a pot bellied stove. Sheep and cattle graze in the next field and dry stone walls bound a woodland fringe and hay meadows. It is a place of peace and tranquillity.</span></span></p>

St Leonard

Keevil, Wiltshire | BA13 4QN

The church is mainly 14th century with Perpendicular tower and south aisle.

St Andrew

Keighley, Yorkshire | BD21 5HT

The earliest record of Christianity in the area round Keighley dates from 867 AD, when Archbishop Wulfhere of York fled from marauding Danes to Addingham.